The site
derived its ranking by comparing two variables:
total taxes paid per capita, and overall government services.

Total taxes
paid per capita was a fairly straightforward calculation. The authors divided the total tax take by the
state’s population aged 18 and older. In
that statistic, Hawaii ranked 49th out of 50 states. The 46th through 48th states were Minnesota,
Vermont, and Connecticut; the one state to beat us was North Dakota. All of those states, however, ranked highly
in overall government services, and avoided a dreadful ROI score.

To get a score
for overall government services, the ranking process was more involved. Researchers compared 30 different metrics in
such areas as Education (including metrics for the quality of the school system
and the public high school graduation rate), Health (including metrics for quality
of public hospitals and average life expectancy at birth), Safety (with metrics
for crime rates and fatalities per vehicle mile), Economy (with metrics for
median annual household income and poverty rate), and Infrastructure &
Pollution (with metrics for quality of roads and bridges and water
quality). Hawaii ranked 35th in
Education, 13th in Safety, 22nd in Economy, and 11th in Infrastructure &
Pollution, giving it an overall rank of 35th in government services.

It turns out
that with the bottom-scraping score in tax burden and middle-of-the road
ranking in overall government services, Hawaii ranked 50th (out of 50) overall. Its rank was the same as last year.

California was
49th in ROI this year, ranking 45th in tax burden and 34th in services. North Dakota, the only state to beat us in
tax burden, ranked 2nd in services but still finished with a ROI ranking of 48.

At the other
end of the spectrum were New Hampshire, South Dakota, and Florida, ranking 1st
through 3rd in ROI.

One of the
WalletHub experts, a professor of accounting at Monmouth University in New
Jersey, had some interesting observations.
When asked, “What’s the most common way local governments waste taxpayer
dollars?” he said, “Corruption and favoritism with state funded projects along
with allowing labor unions to negotiate unaffordable compensation and benefits
for their members [are] attracting votes from those who benefit while
discouraging taxpayers from staying in high tax states.” He also observed, “States such as Wisconsin
have faced reality and eliminated benefits including inflation proof retirement
plans and lifetime medical insurance to save their states from financial
disaster like New York, New Jersey and California face.”

Another expert,
a vice president of a college in Missouri, wrote, “All government entities need
to spend money as though it is their own. It often seems as though government employees
are not critically reviewing expenditures as to whether they are necessary or
whether the expenditure should be done with a different vendor that might be
less expensive and more effective.”

Those of you
who know about the politics in our state, do you think that any of these
comments sound familiar? We citizens who
are dragged around by the scruff of our necks and squeezed until our pockets
are emptied would do well to make sure we are getting value for the government
we have. If we don’t speak up, we’ll get
the government we have and not the government we want.